In America (film)

The film was an Irish, American and British co-production, and was nominated for three Academy Awards: Best Original Screenplay for the Sheridans, Best Actress for Samantha Morton and Best Supporting Actor for Djimon Hounsou.The family settles in New York City, in a rundown Hell's Kitchen walk-up tenement occupied by drug addicts, transvestites, and a reclusive Nigerian artist/photographer named Mateo Kuamey.The devout Roman Catholic Johnny questions God and has lost any ability to feel true emotions, which has affected his relationship with his family.After finding the apartment, Sarah gets a job in the local ice cream parlor to support the family while Johnny auditions for any role for which he is suited, with no success.Despite their poverty, the initial joy of being in the United States and the closeness of the family gives them the energy to make the most of what they have, and Christy chronicles the events of their life with a cherished camcorder.Eventually Johnny finds work as a cab driver to augment their income and help pay for the girls' Catholic school tuition.[3] Though the character of Mateo appears to be a signifier of the early AIDS epidemic in the 1980s, Sheridan said it wasn't his intention to set the film in the 1980s explicitly, saying, "I didn’t want everybody from the art department running around changing the license plates on cars in New York.[2] The soundtrack includes songs performed by The Lovin' Spoonful, Culture Club, The Corrs, The Byrds, Kid Creole and The Coconuts, Evan Olson, and The Langhorns.It eventually grossed $15,539,656 in the US and $9,843,255 elsewhere, for a total worldwide box office of $25,382,911[1] Rotten Tomatoes gave the film a score of 89%, based on 177 reviews, and an average rating of 7.75/10.But instead, thanks to Jim Sheridan's graceful, scrupulously sincere direction and the dry intelligence of his cast, In America is likely to pierce the defenses of all but the most dogmatically cynical viewers ."[15] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times observed, "In America is not unsentimental about its new arrivals (the movie has a warm heart and frankly wants to move us), but it is perceptive about the countless ways in which it is hard to be poor and a stranger in a new land.There's no questioning the director's ability to wring moving moments from potentially sentimental and decidedly familiar material: the story of penniless immigrants trying to make it in Manhattan.
Jim SheridanKirsten SheridanSamantha MortonPaddy ConsidineSarah BolgerEmma BolgerDjimon HounsouDeclan QuinnNaomi GeraghtyGavin FridayMaurice SeezerFox Searchlight Picturesdrama filmKirstenAcademy AwardsBest Original ScreenplayBest ActressBest Supporting Actortourist visaHell's Kitchentenementdrug addictstransvestitesRoman Catholicice cream parlorcamcorderE.T. the Extra-Terrestrialcab driverHalloweentrick-or-treatHIV-positiveborn prematurelynervous breakdownblood transfusionA Chorus LineAdrian MartinezAIDS epidemicManhattanTimes SquareLincoln Tunnel8th StreetEast VillageArdmore StudiosCounty WicklowParnell StreetThe Lovin' SpoonfulCulture ClubThe CorrsThe ByrdsKid Creole and The CoconutsEvan OlsonThe LanghornsToronto International Film FestivalSundance Film FestivalTribeca Film FestivalEdinburgh Film FestivalAustin Film FestivalRotten TomatoesMetacriticThe New York TimesA. O. ScottRoger EbertChicago Sun-TimesSan Francisco ChroniclePeter TraversRolling StoneSt. Petersburg TimesUSA TodayThe ObserverPhilip FrenchFebruary 29, 2004American Film InstituteNovember 2003Bangkok International Film FestivalJanuary 31, 2004Black Reel AwardsFebruary 22, 2004British Independent Film AwardsNovember 4, 2003Best ActorBest DirectorCritics’ Choice AwardsJanuary 10, 2004Best WriterBest FilmBest Young PerformerBest SongFilm Fest GentGolden Globe AwardsJanuary 25, 2004Best ScreenplayBest Original SongIndependent Spirit AwardsFebruary 28, 2004Best CinematographyBest Supporting ActressNational Board of Review AwardsDecember 3, 2003NAACP Image AwardsMarch 6, 2004Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Motion PictureProducers Guild of America AwardsJanuary 17, 2004Stanley Kramer AwardSan Diego Film Critics Society AwardsDecember 18, 2003Satellite AwardsFebruary 21, 2004Best Film – DramaBest Supporting Actor – Motion PictureBest Actor - Motion Picture DramaBest Actress - Motion Picture DramaBest Supporting Actress - Motion PictureScreen Actors Guild AwardsOutstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion PictureWriters Guild of America AwardsYoung Artist AwardsMay 8, 2004Box Office MojoAFI Catalog of Feature FilmsAllMusicMcCarthy, ToddIndieWireAustin ChronicleScott, A. O.Ebert, RogerSun-Times Media GroupHearst CorporationTravers, PeterWenner MediaTimes Publishing CompanyGannett CompanyFrench, PhilipGuardian Media GroupTODAY.comLos Angeles TimesMy Left FootThe FieldIn the Name of the FatherThe BoxerGet Rich or Die Tryin'BrothersDream HouseThe Secret ScriptureProducers Guild Stanley Kramer AwardI Am SamAntwone FisherHotel RwandaInnocent VoicesGood Night, and Good LuckAn Inconvenient TruthThe Great DebatersPreciousSean PennIn the Land of Blood and HoneyFruitvale StationThe Normal HeartThe Hunting GroundLovingGet OutJane FondaBombshellRita MorenoSatellite Award for Best FilmTitanicThe Thin Red LineThe InsiderTrafficIn the BedroomFar from HeavenBrokeback MountainThe DepartedNo Country for Old MenSlumdog MillionaireThe Hurt LockerIf Beale Street Could TalkFord v FerrariNomadlandBelfastOppenheimerThe BrutalistAs Good as It GetsShakespeare in LoveBeing John MalkovichNurse BettyMoulin Rouge!My Big Fat Greek WeddingLost in TranslationSidewaysWalk the LineDreamgirlsHappy-Go-LuckyScott Pilgrim vs. the WorldA Star Is BornOnce Upon a Time in HollywoodThe Forty-Year-Old Versiontick, tick... BOOM!Everything Everywhere All at OnceThe HoldoversThe Social NetworkThe DescendantsSilver Linings Playbook12 Years a SlaveBirdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)SpotlightLa La LandManchester by the SeaGod's Own CountryThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, MissouriBlacKkKlansman